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Lyr Req/Add: Wolves a Howlin'

oombanjo 27 Dec 04 - 04:39 PM
Joe Offer 27 Dec 04 - 05:15 PM
oombanjo 27 Dec 04 - 05:25 PM
Joe Offer 27 Dec 04 - 05:28 PM
GUEST,Dale 27 Dec 04 - 08:07 PM
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Subject: Lyr Req: Wolves a Howlin
From: oombanjo
Date: 27 Dec 04 - 04:39 PM

Hi, and best wishes to all mudcatters for the new year,I have checked
on lyric search for this one, unless it is under another name its not in.It goes (caint you hear the wolves a howlin, all around my pretty little darlin) Here's Hoping...


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Subject: ADD: Wolves A' Howlin'
From: Joe Offer
Date: 27 Dec 04 - 05:15 PM

Hi, oombanjo - there's a recording of the song on the Anne Hills - Cindy Mangsen CD called Never Grow Old. They sing with different performers on each cut - this one is with John Hartford, and it's a gem. Every song on this CD is a gem, for that matter. the notes say John Hartford heard this song in his Missouri County hometown, sung by Goldie Goforth accompanied by her brother Gene on fiddle. Hartford sings lead and plays fiddle on this cut.
Here's what I hear:


Wolves A'Howlin'

Ah-woooooh! Ah-woooooh!

Cain't you hear them wolves a'howlin',
All around you, poor little darlin'?
Cain't you hear them wolves a'prowlin',
All around you, poor little darlin'?

You better watch out, or the wolves will get you,
But you know I'll never forget you.

Cain't you hear them wolves a'howlin',
All around you, poor little darlin'?
Poor little darlin', poor little darlin'
Howlin' around you, poor little darlin'.

[fiddle break]

One on the hillside, two in the holler,
Bet them wolves have done and got her.

Cain't you hear them wolves a'howlin',
All around you, poor little darlin'?
Cain't you hear them wolves a'prowlin',
All around you, poor little darlin'?

One on the hillside, two in the holler,
Bet them wolves have done and got her.

Ah-woooooh!



See this page on Gene Goforth at www.johnhartford.com.


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Wolves a Howlin
From: oombanjo
Date: 27 Dec 04 - 05:25 PM

Thanks Joe, Can I order the CD over the net from the Uk ??? And for any Oltimers we are having a get together on the first weekend of May in sewerby park East Yorkshire. this under the umberella of, FOAOTMAD. I WILL BE POSTING MORE INFO AS WE MOVE TOWARDS MAY, THANKS AGAIN OOMBANJO


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Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Wolves a Howlin
From: Joe Offer
Date: 27 Dec 04 - 05:28 PM

I took the following information from The Fiddler's Companion:

    WOLVES A HOWLIN'. Old‑Time, Breakdown. USA; Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas. A Major: G Major (John Brown/Bruce Molsky, Phillips). AEae (most versions): GDgd (John Brown). AAB (Phillips): AABB. Tom Rankin (1985) identifies the tune as one specific to the "Old Southwest", or the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Southwestern Missouri Ozarks fiddler Bob Holt (1930) learned it from local sources. "Wolves…" was specialty tune of Tuscallosa fiddler Monkey Brown (1897‑1972) who was active in Alabama contest fiddling in the 1920's and 30's. It was a common tune in western Alabama, especially the Tombigbee‑Warrior region (Cauthen). The tune was one of several old‑time fiddle pieces listed in a 1925 University of Alabama master's thesis by S.M. Taylor entitled "A Preliminary Survey of Folk‑Lore in Alabama." Robert Fleder (1971) remarks that "Wolves Howlin'" has been collected in Mississippi and Oklahoma as well as Alabama, "but there is no reason to suspect that it is not indigenous to the Alabama‑Mississippi region." Mississippi fiddler John Brown, of Tishomingo County, was recorded in 1939 playing the tune in GDgd tuning. He was over age 80 at the time. Some see resemblances to "Cotton-Eyed Joe [1]." See also Kentucky fiddler Buddy Thomas's "Sheep and Hogs Walking Through the Pasture." Little Jimmy Dickens recorded the tune under the title "Poor Little Darlin'." The first line of the lyrics, according to Rankin, is common in tradition, but the second is often composed at the whim of the source.
      ***

      Wolves outside howl and a‑hollar
      They gonna getch‑you
      Bet you a Dollar !
      (Unknown)

      ***

      O don't you hear them wolves a‑howlin,
      All around my poor little darlin';
      Four on the hillside, six in the holler,
      They're gonna get 'er, betcha a dollar.
      (Thede)

      ***

      Don't you hear them wolves a‑howling,
      Setting in the corner talking to my darling.   
      (Rankin)

      ***

      ‑‑‑‑' Wolves a‑howlin'
      All around my poor little darlin'
      Can't you see those blue clouds flyin'
      Poor little darlin', home a‑cryin' (or 'hollerin' and cryin')

      ***

      Wolves are, howlin', howlin', howlin'
      Oh the wolves are howlin'
      Howlin' found my...{stop singing}
      (John Hatcher, Mississippi)

      ***

      Can't you hear them wolves a'howlin'
      All around you poor little darlin'
      One on the hillside, two in the hollar
      Bet them wolves have done and got her.

      ***

      Sheep and Hogs and walkin' thru the pasture
      Sheeps said, `Hogs can't you run a little faster?'
      Go on there and hush your growlin'
      Can't you hear them wolves a'howlin'?   
      (Goldie Goforth, sister of fiddler Gene Goforth)

      ***


    Sources for notated versions: W.S. Collins (Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma) [Thede]; John Hartford [Phillips]. Phillips (Traditional American Fiddle Tunes), 1994; pg. 260. Thede (The Fiddle Book), 1967; pg. 133. Briar 4204, Earl Collins. County 401, "The Stripling Brothers." Marimac 9000, Dan Gellert & Shoofly ‑ "Forked Deer" (1986). Mississippi Department of Archives and History AH‑002, W.E. Claunch & John Brown ‑ "Great Big Yam Potatoes: Anglo‑American Fiddle Music From Mississippi" (1985. Two different renditions, originally recorded for the Library of Congress in 1939). Rounder 0361, Bruce Molsky – "Lost Boy" (1996. 1st part based on John Brown, 2nd on the Stripling Bros.). Rounder RO-0388, Gene Goforth –"Emminence Breakdown" (1997). Rounder 0442, John Hartford – "Hamilton Ironworks." Vocalion 5412/02770 (78 RPM), Stripling Brothers (Alabama) {1929}.

You can special-order the Hills-Mangsen Never Grow Old CD (Flying Fish #70638) and the Gene Goforth Emminence Breakdown CD (Rounder #ROUCD0388) from www.amazon.co.uk. You might have better luck ordering direct from Rounder, http://www.rounder.com/, since Flying Fish is a Rounder label.
-Joe Offer-


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Subject: RE: Req/ADD: Wolves a Howlin'
From: GUEST,Dale
Date: 27 Dec 04 - 08:07 PM

Most versions in our area come either from Bob Holt in person or Bruce Molsky's recording. The Stripling Brothers recording is probably my favorite, though it is a close call.


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